IRS Tax Relief - Top Tips -- Currently not Collectible

Thecorrect term is Currently not Collectible. This means that at the present moment, you do not have the ability to pay the IRS anything toward your tax liability.

Can't Pay the IRS for Tax Liability -- The IRS May Declare You Currently not Collectible

If you do not have the means to pay your tax liability, have little assets that can be immediately sold or that the IRS can levy, no income above the minimum need to cover what is called "allowable expenses", you would most likely be able to be considered "uncollectible" to the IRS. Being considered Currently not Collectible (uncollectible) to the IRS means that the IRS can temporarily pause collection activity against you for your tax debt under the IRS hardship rule. A temporary pause is usually 18 to 24 months.

How Do You Become Currently not Collectible

If you qualify to be declared Currently not Collectibe (Uncollectible), you will still owe the IRS for your tax liability and interest will continue to accrue. However, all collection activities must be temporarily suspended against you. The IRS will then continue to monitor your financial situation to see if it improves to a point where they can demand payment for your tax debt. This review happens normally every 18 to 24 months. You will be required to send an updated financial statement ( a 433 Form) periodically for them to review. These statements must be accurate because the IRS will compare it to filed tax returns to make sure everything matches.

Advantage to being Currently not Collectible (Uncollectible)

One important thing to note about being considered Currently not Collectible (a/k/a currently uncollectible) is that the Statute of Limitations is still running for those back taxes owed. The Statute of Limitations lasts 10 years on IRS taxes due, if they are not collected in this period, the IRS can no longer collect on these amounts (with some exceptions). Many people have been declared uncollectible (declared Currently not Collectible) for a period of many years and have ended up owing no tax once that statute of limitations has expired.

Are You on Social Security / Disability and Have Limited or No Assets

If you are on a fixed income, Social Security or Disability and have limited or no assets, you may be declared Currently not Collectible (Uncollectible).

In order to be declared Currently not Collectible (uncollectible) by the IRS, you must be able to prove that you do not have any assets that would allow you to pay your tax liability. Therefore,, you must show you only have enough money to pay for your basic living necessities. To do this, you must fill out an IRS Form 433-F. This is the form used to show all your assets, and is required with most IRS filings. The 433-F Form will give the IRS a sense of your assets that they could liquidate to satisfy your tax liability. However, the purpose of doing this when filling the 433-F is to show that you do not have any assets of value that they can liquidate and it would not be worth their time and effort to collect from you.

Can You Become Currently not Collectible on Your Own

Yes you can. However, the IRS is not going to help you. The IRS does not exist to be helpful. The job of the IRS is to collect money. It is the responsibility of the taxpayer to complete the documents correctly and to submit them correctly, timely and completely.

The formula for declaring anyone Currently not Collectible is complicated. The same is true for the Offer in Compromise program.

YOU NEED TO KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DOING

IRS Tax relief Help

Should you make an error of any kind, the IRS will disallow your petition and continue to do what they do best, collect money and enforce payment of your tax debt.

What Happens to my IRS Tax Liability

Your tax debt with the IRS will continue to accrue interest and will add to the amount owed. So at the end of the Currently not Collectible (Uncollectible) period you, the taxpayer, will owe more than you did when originally classified as uncollectible.

DON'T FORGET

the

STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS

is

CONTINUING

Will the IRS file a Tax Lien

Probably yes. Until the Statute of Limitations runs out, the IRS will continue to attempt to keep their tax debt alive. One way of doing that is to file a Tax Lien. This could affect aspects of your credit.

What Happens During This Currently not Collectible Time Frame

At the end of the initial Currently not Collectible (Uncollectible) period, IRS will want to re-evaluate your financial position. Once again, you will need to submit a new 433-F Form. If your new figures show that you have positive cash flow and can afford to make monthly payments, then IRS will set you up on a monthly Installment Agreement. If not much has changed and your monthly expenses are equal to or greater than your monthly income, then IRS will tell you that you are still deemed Currently not Collectible (Uncollectible) and you will not be required to make any payments toward your tax liability.

THE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS

CONTINUES

TO RUN

IRS Settlement Success

What Else Can You Do While You are Uncollectible

If the IRS has declared that you cannot make payments on your tax liability and given you Currently not Collectible status, doesn't it make sense to take this one (1) step further and settle your back tax debt. You could be done with your tax liability once and for all.

We Strongly Recommend an Offer in Compromise

Get rid of your tax debt. You can settle your tax debt and make small payments on the settlement amount for a short amount of time. You can be free of your tax debt before the Statute of Limitations runs out.

“These changes to the Offer in Compromise program will help give taxpayers a fresh start,” said Doug Shulman, the IRS commissioner, in a conference call with reporters. These changes “are especially appropriate as the American people and small businesses are climbing out of the worst recession in a generation.”

“I’ve made a whole set of changes to the Offer in Compromise (OIC) program since I’ve been here to try to increase the participation rate, increase the acceptance rate, because it’s good for the tax system,” Doug Shulman, the IRS Commissioner said.

TAKE ADVANTAGE

SETTLE WITH THE IRS

If you qualify for an IRS Settlement through the IRS Offer in Compromise (OIC) program, you can "get your life back", you can save thousands of dollars in taxes, penalties and interest. You, the taxpayer, can have your IRS Tax Debt on all types of taxes, including most payroll taxes, penalties, and interest, settled. It is the closest thing to amnesty that the federal government offers in connection with back tax debt.

Any Christian taxpayer that is struggling financially should not be in the bondage of their tax debt. Flat Fee Tax Service, Inc. offers real IRS income tax solutions based on our Christian values and principles.

Christians (all denominations), there are generally 3 IRS incometax remedies available to you. Our experienced and friendly IRS tax relief team will help you by going over these different remedies that are available to you. We can start working on your case to today and start to reduce your tax burden immediately.

As we all know, many of our Christian brothers and sisters are experiencing extreme financial hardship. You need an IRS tax resolution firm that provides solid IRS t…

Social Security Benefits Eligible for the Federal Payment Levy Program (FPLP)
The IRS will Levy your Social Security Disability (SSDI) benefits.Through the Federal Payment Levy Program (FPLP), Social Security benefit payments outlined in Title II of the Social Security Act, Federal Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance Benefits, are subject to the 15-percent levy, to pay your delinquent tax debt.

What the IRS Will Not Levy
However, Social Security benefit payments, such as lump sum death benefits and benefits paid to children, are not included in the Federal Payment Levy program (FPLP). Additionally, Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments, under Title XVI, and payments with partial withholding to repay a debt owed to Social Security are not levied through the FPLP. Beginning February 2011, the FPLP may exclude certain delinquent taxpayers who receive social security payments if their income falls at or below certain established …

IRS FORM 4549
If you have not filed tax returns and have delinquent tax returns, the IRS will audit your tax years and reassess your tax liability. You will receive an IRS Form 4549. The IRS will create a "Substitute for Return" which will allow the the IRS to enforce collection against you.
Enforced collection means the IRS will enforce a levy on you and seize your paycheck. The IRS will seize a minimum of 15% of your Social Security, Social Security Disability (SSDI) or your Veteran's Pension through the Federal Payment Levy Program (FPLP). FLAT FEE TAX SERVICE, INC. is known nationwide as the tax resolution company that will have your IRS wage levy stopped and released in 1 day / 24 hours. No tax relief team can have your IRS wage levy stopped faster than our experience Tax Attorneys can.No one.
Although the able tax relief team at Flat Fee Tax Service, Inc.…